Friday, October 25, 2013

Technology and writing

This generation receives a lot of negative stereotypes. We had the fortune of growing up in a time where everything is constantly at our fingertips. We know what our friends are doing by opening up Twitter, how our families vacation is going through glimpses on Facebook, and we have the ability to reach any news source at any time, just by going to our web browser on our phones.
What they forget to give us credit for is that we’re currently the only people trained to do so. We’re the only ones who are taking classes in photoshop, the only ones who grew up with iPhones glued to our hands. Although at times, this could be seen as a disadvantage, for our work field, it could wind up helping us.
Yesterday, I attended a workshop on magazine features and how to get them published. It began with a brief history of cell phones, social media and electronics. What many journalism students fail to realize their first year of writing is that news writing isn’t the only option for us. There’s an array of different things we could do. Personally, my end goal is magazine features.
Mark Mayfield, who is from the University of Alabama, eased my mind a little bit. I consistently hear how hard it is to get a job in the writing field. He said you don’t necessarily need to climb the ladder. The people who say so are a little frightened by our generation and our ability to ease into technology so effortlessly. In reality, when we graduate and all publications move forward, we are the ones trained in it. We’re the ones who will be eventually taking their jobs.
Some tips he provided were to always do it big for your interview. Rather than going to someone’s office, go get lunch with them. Describe the atmosphere for your reader; make them feel like they were a part of the interview as well. Always capture your reader in the first sentence. If they can’t connect with a story, they’re going to keep going to find one they can. Newswriting is a great stepping-stone for other types of writing. It teaches you to be friendly to whom you’re interviewing, it teaches you to work around a deadline and it helps you pay close attention to detail.
The job market for what we want to do is changing. You’re copying and pasting with the click of a finger now; people want news instantly. They want it quickly. They want headlines that are 140 characters long so they can get an educated synopsis of a story on their morning commute. Who better to deliver that then the kids who have seen some of the most advanced technology yet?
This is in no way me condoning the excessive use of technology. But it is me saying that everyone is moving towards that. People of all ages are adapting to the technology change. Shouldn’t journalists, too?

I think that writing an technology go very hand-in-hand. Why not put your iPhone obsession to good use and educate people? Rather than tweeting about silly things, put social media to good use and educate people.
                             
                                                                                    Brittany Tuft, '15, Managing Editor

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